Acute exercise and insulin resistance
A single exercise session has been shown to significantly reduce plasma glucose (36, 37) and insulin (37) levels in type 2 diabetic subjects. Significant improvements in glucose clearance, as assessed through a euglycemic-hyperinsulinemic clamp, have been achieved in obese diabetics and normoglycemics after one hour of moderate-intensity treadmill exercise (38), insulin-resistant subjects after 50 minutes of moderate-intensity stair climbing exercise (39), diabetic subjects after glycogen-depleting cycle exercise (40), and healthy subjects after 60 minutes of moderate-intensity ergometer exercise (41). Not only is insulin sensitivity enhanced immediately after the acute exercise bout (38), it appears to last 20 hours after exercise (40) and even up to 48 hours post exercise (39, 41), finally dissipating five days post exercise (41). The degree of improvement in insulin-stimulated whole-body glucose disposal after a single exercise bout ranges from 15 (41) to 24% (38). These improvements are equal to those achieved through chronic pharmacological intervention (42, 43).

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